1. Histomorphology and ultrastructure of spontaneous pulmonary neoplasms in strain A mice.
- Author
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Dixon D, Horton J, Haseman JK, Talley F, Greenwell A, Nettesheim P, Hook GE, and Maronpot RR
- Subjects
- Adenoma pathology, Animals, Carcinoma, Papillary pathology, Cystadenoma pathology, Lung Neoplasms genetics, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms ultrastructure, Male, Mice, Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal pathology, Rodent Diseases genetics, Rodent Diseases pathology, Lung Neoplasms veterinary, Mice, Inbred A
- Abstract
The microscopic and ultrastructural characteristics of spontaneous pulmonary neoplasms in strain A (strA) mice are described. Fifty-one spontaneous lung tumors were identified in 34 out of 57, 11-23-month-old male strA/Hen mice. Grossly, all tumors appeared as yellow-white, discrete nodules ranging in size from 1.0-10 mm. Tumor types were randomly distributed throughout the lung; however, the right lung lobes were most frequently involved. Histologically, tumors were classified as adenoma (34/51) or carcinoma (17/51) as defined by standard histopathologic criteria. Adenomas were usually less than 4 mm in diameter and had solid (16/34), papillary (10/34), or mixed (8/34) histologic growth patterns. Carcinomas were usually greater than 4 mm in diameter and had papillary (13/17) or mixed (4/17) histologic growth patterns. Ultrastructurally, benign tumors consisted of solid or papillary areas of neoplastic type II-like cells. Cells comprising malignant tumors had varying ultrastructural characteristics ranging from well-differentiated alveolar cell types to undifferentiated cells having intracytoplasmic osmiophilic dense bodies, vacuoles, or few specialized organelles commonly observed in mature nonneoplastic pulmonary epithelial cells.
- Published
- 1991
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